
Room for Oliver Sudden please: Harry Styles' undercover names in hotels leave staff in splits
Harry Styles reportedly uses a hidden entrance to enter and exit the hotel in Scotland while being ferried around in a Mercedes S-Class
2023-05-28 20:58

U.S., Saudi Arabia call for extended ceasefire in Sudan
By Khalid Abdelaziz DUBAI Saudi Arabia and the United States called on Sunday for the extension of a
2023-05-28 20:58

Melissa Kinsella: Mum left in coma in Turkey dies after UK return
Melissa Kinsella arrived back in the UK on Wednesday after £50,000 was raised to get her home.
2023-05-28 20:57

Bradley Cooper rocks unique style with long-sleeved top and capri pants while lunching with Michael J Fox in NYC
The Michael J Fox Foundation, founded in 2000, has claimed that a Parkinson's cure is 'closer than it's ever been'
2023-05-28 20:52

Tennis-Kostyuk did not deserve jeers for refusing handshake, says Sabalenka
By Shrivathsa Sridhar PARIS Aryna Sabalenka said she understood Marta Kostyuk's decision to skip customary post-match handshakes with
2023-05-28 20:48

'In awe of you every single day': Aaron Paul pays sweet 10th wedding anniversary tribute to wife Lauren Parsekian
Aaron Paul and Lauren Parsekian met at the Coachella Festival in 2010 and got married in 2013
2023-05-28 20:27

'Tour wife' Kourtney Kardashian shares steamy video supporting husband Travis Barker amid Blink-182 tour
Kourtney Kardashian, 44, showed off her toned physique while celebrating National Sunscreen Day
2023-05-28 20:26

Europe's 'City of Atlantis' discovered after being lost for 600 years
The remains of a church from a sunken town known as the 'Atlantis of the North Sea' has been discovered beneath the mud on Germany's coast. The church is believed to be part of a site called 'Rungholt' located in the Wadden Sea. The town, which was previously thought to be a local legend, has not been seen since 1362 after it was submerged beneath the waves during an intense storm. However, new research has shown that the town really did exist and that they had built reinforcements around the settlement to protect them from the severe elements. The research was carried out on the area by archeologists from Kiel University, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, the Center for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology, and the State Archaeology Department Schleswig-Holstein. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Searching the Wadden Sea which is the longest stretch of intertidal sand and mud flats on Earth, the team, using geophysical imaging technology found man-made mounds that had been constructed to protect the town against the tides. Amongst this structure were the foundations of a building which the team determined had to be a church which may have been the location of the town centre. In a statement, Dr. Dennis Wilken, a geophysicist at Kiel University of Kiel University said: "Settlement remains hidden under the mudflats are first localized and mapped over a wide area using various geophysical methods such as magnetic gradiometry, electromagnetic induction, and seismics." Dr. Hanna Hadler from the Institute of Geography at Mainz University added: "Based on this prospection, we selectively take sediment cores that not only allow us to make statements about spatial and temporal relationships of settlement structures, but also about landscape development." Dr. Ruth Blankenfeldt, an archaeologist at ZBSA also suggested that the "special feature of the find lies in the significance of the church as the centre of a settlement structure, which in its size must be interpreted as a parish with superordinate function." The storm that washed away Rungholt has gone down in history as one of the largest to ever hit the region, affecting not just Germany but also the Netherlands, Denmark and the UK. The storm happened on January 1362 and has since been referred to as "the great drowning of men." According to historical reports, Rungholt was once a busy trading port for fishermen but was also populated by taverns, brothels and churches. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-05-28 19:27

Here's what's in the debt ceiling deal
After several weeks of tense negotiations, President Joe Biden and House Republicans have reached an agreement in principle to raise the debt ceiling and cap spending.
2023-05-28 19:26

Jeers rain down as Kostyuk refuses to shake hands with Sabalenka at French Open
Aryna Sabalenka kept her cool to win a politically-charged French Open duel against Marta Kostyuk on Sunday as jeers rained down after the defeated Ukrainian refused to...
2023-05-28 19:25

‘American Idol’ runner-up Megan Danielle shuts down rumors that finale was 'rigged' in favor of Iam Tongi
Iam Tongi was crowned the winner of Season 21 with Megan Danielle coming second and Colin Stough third
2023-05-28 19:19

Tina Turner spent her final years in agony, fighting several health battles and mourning sons' deaths
In an interview, Tina Turner's daughter-in-law Afida spoke about the singer's unbearable grief after outliving half of her children
2023-05-28 19:15
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